BETA
This is a BETA experience. You may opt-out by clicking here

More From Forbes

Edit Story

High Mortgage Rates Mean Smaller Homes For Many Buyers

The sharp increase in mortgage rates to their highest level in 15 years is not only cutting into home buyer budgets across the country, but also trimming at least 100 square feet out of the homes in would-be buyers’ price range in 29 of the 50 metros analyzed by Redfin.

The technology-powered real estate brokerage analyzed the median square footage of homes affordable on a $3,000 monthly housing budget based on list prices, mortgage rates and the supply of homes for sale on September 29, 2022 versus September 30, 2021.

The typical home affordable on a $3,000 budget is under 1,000 square feet in six of the metros in the analysis: New York; and in California: San Diego, San Jose, Anaheim, Oakland and San Francisco. A year ago, only San Francisco fell into that category.

A San Diego home buyer with a $3,000 monthly budget can only afford a 931-square-foot home at today’s 6.7% mortgage rate, down from the 1,366-square-foot home the same buyer could have purchased a year ago, when rates were sitting near record lows at 3%. That 435-square-foot difference in San Diego is the biggest of the 50 most populous metros for buyers with a $3,000 monthly budget.

“Soaring mortgage rates are throwing a wrench into prospective buyers’ plans,” said Redfin senior economist Sheharyar Bokhari. “Many would-be buyers are dropping out of the market because they can no longer afford the home they want, resulting in a dramatic dip in home sales. For buyers who need a home right now–and can still afford it–compromise is the name of the game. Some buyers will choose to sacrifice on location or move further away from the city center so they can get the space they want, while others will settle on a smaller home in their ideal location.”

According to Redfin economists, rising mortgage rates should theoretically cause home prices to fall enough to compensate for the additional monthly interest cost, which would mean buyers could afford the same-sized home. But while home prices have fallen from their 2022 peak in most metros, they haven’t fallen from a year ago anywhere except the Bay Area and a few other places. That’s largely because of a lack of homes for sale.

In San Diego, for example, home prices were up 7% year over year in August, rising from a median of $749,000 to $800,000. Home buyers’ monthly housing payments would be more expensive even without higher mortgage rates, but with rates more than doubling, they’re significantly more expensive.

A San Diego buyer purchasing the median-priced home today would pay more than $5,000 per month with a 6.7% rate, up from about $3,500 for last year’s median-priced home with a 3% rate. That means buyers need to search for cheaper homes, which typically translates to smaller ones.

After San Diego, Newark, New Jersey has seen the biggest decline in the size of home that buyers can afford. A Newark buyer on a $3,000 monthly budget can afford a 1,726-square-foot home today, down from 2,156 square feet a year ago. Nassau County, New York (1,300 square feet, down from 1,712), Denver (1,571, down from 1,933) and Portland, Oregon (1,504, down from 1,800) round out the top five.

Rising mortgage rates affect home sizes and affordability differently across metro areas because prices and annual price growth both vary depending on location. The mix of homes available to buy also differs across different metro areas, and from one year to the next.